Catalogue entry

Turner’s label for this drawing is inscribed ‘Lac de Geneve, from Vevay’ [sic]. David Hill’s reidentification as the Castle of Chillon from near Montreux and Clarens, followed by the present author when the drawing was exhibited in 1999, was in turn corrected by Cecilia Powell whose review of the exhibition pointed out that Turner’s label was right after all, and that the building by the lakeside in the middle distance is the Château de Tour-de-Peilz (now the Musée Suisse du Jeu), built in the thirteenth century by the Counts of Savoy. The viewpoint is from the lakeside close to the market-place at Vevey, along the north bank towards the mountains of the Rhône Valley.

In his catalogue notes for Marlborough House, John Ruskin wrote of this drawing: ‘The mountains in the distance are very carefully faithful in contour, and not in the least exaggerated. The absence of exaggeration is, indeed, very characteristic ... as compared with [the drawings] of any other artist. Compare the subdued and quiet forms of the mountains in this drawing with any common Swiss one of the head of the Lake of Geneva.’1

Ruskin owned a larger drawing (currently untraced)2 which sounds from his description like a version of the same subject; ‘A few of the backs of the houses of the lovely old village, as they used to rise out of the lake, – the sun setting over Jura in the distance’.